proteus wrote:
There is no increased safety, when u put a blind spot infront of the driver. Imagine the eyestrain the drivers will be experiencing watching that middle pillar infront of them the whole time. And so far, there was no indication how will they drive in the rain, when water will be splashed on both sides of the windscreen (in case they use windscreen solution). Another problem that may occur is that if the driver actually gets hit in the protective halo, what if the hinge jamms and prevents driver to exit the car.
In the end this "solution" will provide much more issues and danger, than positive effects, u will see.
The last nail into the coffin will be when they will get a brilliant idea of putting mudguards on the car...
The driver never looks directly towards the middle piller, you dont drive an F1 car or for the matter of fact any normal car....you have to look beyond the car to driver it
Windscreen cleaning?
http://gizmodo.com/mclaren-is-using-fig ... 1484213049
Mclaren has these technology long ago
If you think for a moment that F1 teams wouldn't have a way of keeping a canopy clean from oil/water/rubber, then you're simply being too narrow sighted. Canopies are the most ideal way forward and it's better for aero. If the vehicle is upside down, the car is resting on the roll hoop, so the canopy can be removed.
We dont have to reinvent these queries that you mentioned above, the technology exists in other racing categories such as LMP1 cars ....just see what is happeneing there
that looks remarkably similar to an F1 car!
I am sure with the current technology we can make a compact and elegant version of the above solution